Socialist Party Socialistiska partiet | |
---|---|
Leader | Nils Flyg (1929–1943) Agaton Blom (1943) |
Founded | 1929 |
Dissolved | 1948 |
Split from | Communist Party of Sweden |
Newspaper | Folkets Dagblad Politiken Tidens Röst (after 1940) |
Ideology | Socialism Anti-Stalinism Pro-Nazi[A] (from 1940)[1][2] |
Political position | Left-wing |
International affiliation | International Communist Opposition (1929–1933), International Revolutionary Marxist Centre (1933–1938) |
Party flag | |
^ A: Flyg believed that Stalinism would be the worst result of the German-Soviet War. Flyg believed that Hitler's brand of socialism would be better than Stalinism, and fully embraced Nazism; except for the antisemitism. Flyg's successor, Blom, would become the leader of a neo-Nazi party. |
The Socialist Party (Swedish: Socialistiska partiet), was a political party in Sweden active from 1929 to 1948. Led by Karl Kilbom and Nils Flyg, the party was founded in 1929 as a splinter group of the Communist Party of Sweden. Until 1934, the splinter group used the same name Communist Party of Sweden (Swedish: Sveriges kommunistiska parti), so in order to keep the two factions apart, this faction was generally known as Kilbommare ("Kilbomiars") while those who stayed in the old party were known as Sillénare ("Sillénians", after their leader Hugo Sillén).
In the split, the entire communist parliamentary group, the party's official newspaper, Folkets Dagblad Politiken, and most of the more militant members joined the Kilbom-Flyg faction.
In 1943, under Agaton Blom, they changed their name to the Swedish Socialist Party (Swedish: Svenska socialistiska partiet, SSP)[3] and existed in this form until it dissolved in 1948.